Fuck all the bells and whistles of modern design. I don't need a gigantic chopping machine with four speeds and serrated edges to cut up my dinner—I'll just use a knife, thanks. Worked for Neanderthal man, should be right for me. I mean, they haven't changed the design of edible flesh anytime recently, have they?

G.I. Joe was as important to my young life as breathing, eating and stealing the Sports Illustrated swimsuit issue every year. The cartoon taught me that war was hell (but that everyone was a terrible shot) and that there were hundreds of things in my life that could kill me at any moment.

"Blanket Weather" (2011), the long awaited and highly anticipated follow up to "2.0" is finally out now. Download it for free and groove out to it in your ride! Artists sampled range from LCD Soundsystem to Daft Punk to Kanye West to Rilo Kiley.

There may be more than a dozen toilets on his front lawn, but David Linscott will not sit down. The Kittery, Maine, plumbing contractor has lined his property with 10 commodes of varying shapes and sizes as an act of protest.

Here's the next step in the evolution of Hollywood's never-ending circle of creative recycling: Batman is getting a reboot. They're already planning to start the whole franchise over, even though the next installment in the current incarnation, The Dark Knight Rises, is still filming.

Nah, there's no joke here. Just shitty human beings. Human beings that beat their spouses with increased frequency in relation to NFL outcomes. That's right, a new study published in The Quarterly Journal of Economics reports that men are more likely to beat their wives in the event of an NFL upset. Their team loses and that's how they react.

At Digg we have substantially rebuilt our infrastructure over the last year in what we call "Digg V4". This blog post gives a high-level view of the systems and technologies involved and how we use them. Read on to find out the secrets of the Digg engineers!

The Hole is a 1962 short animation by John Hubley and Faith Hubley that won an Academy Award for Short Subjects (Cartoons) in 1962. The film uses improvised dialogue from Dizzy Gillespie and George Mathews as a pair of construction workers, one white, one black. Working deep underground, our cartoon heroes begin debating the fate of the world and the possibility of nuclear annihilation...from under the streets of New York.